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Press Release - Fox Valley Marathon - 9/21/10

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
                Inaugural Fox Valley Marathon a success

The sun started tiptoeing shyly over the horizon early Sunday morning and 
with it came potential-the start of something new.

The inaugural Fox Valley Marathon kicked off Sunday Sept. 19 on First St. 
in St. Charles and the buzz could be felt around the world.

One thousand, one hundred runners from 30 different states and three 
different countries (Sri Lanka and Japan) congregated at the corner of 
First and Illinois Streets to partake in one of the three races the event 
had to offer.

There were runners ranging from 11 years old to 79. First-time runners and 
seasoned veterans, including world-class distance runner Tera Moody. Some 
chose to walk most of the way in the marathon while another runner held on 
to a volunteer the whole time.

David Kuhn, a resident of Dekalb, Ill., may be blind, but he was not to be 
denied the chance to be a part of the first race of its kind in the 
Chicagoland suburbs in 30 years.

Michael Iacofano wasn't going to be denied, either, cruising to the top 
finish in the Dick Pond Athletics Fox Valley Marathon with a time of 
2:41:44, more than eight minutes ahead of the next marathon finisher.

"It feels good," said Iacofano, a native of Medina, Ohio, who set a 
personal record by three minutes. "I didn't know who would be here, so I 
figured I was just going to go out and with any luck, I could win the 
Masters race. I didn't think I'd be able to win the whole thing."

Trey Howell of St. Petersburg, Fla., crossed the finish line second in the 
marathon with a time of 2:49:51. Chicago's own Lorne Litwora came in third 
at 2:50:53. Anna Siliciano of Madison, Wis., paced the Female Overall with 
a time of 3:06:27 while Jennifer Benitez of Carol Stream, Ill., came in 
just nine seconds behind Siliciano at 3:06:27. Karen Meraw (3:06:50) 
rounded out the Female Overall winners of the marathon.

Kirk Samples (2:57:35) headed up the Male Masters while Gail Stevens 
(3:22:55) claimed the Female Masters title.

Tera Moody highlighted the Dreyer Medical Clinic Fall Final 20 with a time 
of 1:59:47. She also served as the event's celebrity, a St. Charles native 
who has made a name for herself in the running community over the past 
decade with accomplishments ranging from winning the Big 12 title in the 
10,000 meter race as a freshman at Colorado to finishing fifth in the 
Olympic Marathon trials in 2008 at Boston coming in a mere second behind 
the fourth-place runner.

"It was so great to be back," said Moody, who attended and graduated from 
St. Charles High School. "I have a lot of memories of running on the path 
from when I was in high school and even junior high. I don't run here 
hardly ever. Usually when I come back, I come to the city [Chicago]. So, to 
be back on the bike path, it's just really cool. It brought back a lot of 
memories. 

"A lot of people at the aid stations and then the marathon runners as I was 
coming back, they were yelling my name and saying 'good job.' It made me 
feel really good and it helped kind of keep me going. It was really nice. 
Especially people who are running their own marathon to take the time out 
to cheer for me as I ran by, it just really meant a lot to me."

Kendra Castelloni (2:00:16) and Wendy Rogers (2:12:59) rounded out the top 
finishers in Female Overall for the 20-miler. Steve Breese took home the 
crown with a time of 1:57:02 while James Akita (1:59:52) and Brian Cagney 
(2:00:43) also placed in the Fall Final 20, a race designed to prepare 
runners like Moody for the Chicago Marathon on Oct. 10.

Jennifer Wilfong (2:12:59) topped the Female Masters in the 20 while James 
Hard (2:15:51) led the Male Masters category.

Brian Grudowski took home the distinct honor of being the first runner to 
cross the finish line in the inaugural race, finishing the Half Marathon in 
1:09:06.

"It feels great," Grudowski said of the win. "This is great. I felt really 
good about representing Dick Ponds, my employer. It was a good course and a 
really, really promising race for the future. Hopefully, it will grow 
bigger."

The Buffalo Grove, Ill., native who assistant manages the Dick Ponds store 
in Schaumburg, Ill., said crossing the line as the first-ever finisher of 
the event was a motivating factor in his effort.

"I was thinking about [being the first finisher] the last half of the 
race," he said. "It was kind of my goal in mind. I was really out in front 
by a lot, so I had to have something to keep me going other than just my 
watch."

Chris Bosworth (1:12:16) and Brad Wheeler (1:17:53) crossed behind 
Grudowski in the Half Marathon while Joan Vitro (1:39:24) claimed the 
Female Overall title. Allison Bixler, daughter of Co-Race Director Craig 
Bixler, finished second in Female Overall with a time of 1:39:38 while 
Nancy Hunt crossed at 1:39:52.

Jennifer Emmert (1:39:56) won the Female Masters and Christopher Cook 
(1:26:33) topped the Male Masters.

The inaugural Fox Valley Marathon began in St. Charles and dipped through 
Geneva, Batavia, North Aurora and Aurora and received help from hundreds of 
volunteers. The race closed at 1,100 runners, providing a small-town appeal 
with a scenic route.

"I live in Naperville, so the event's right here and I don't have to go way 
down into the city," Renay Pokora, who finished second in the Women's 
Masters of the Half Marathon, said. "I do like the [small time appeal]. 
It's nice, especially not dipping in and out of people and tripping on 
people. Everybody was really friendly."

Pokora, 45, has been running competitively for years, including seven 
marathons. Brendan Beadsley, however, is as new to the racing scene as they 
come.

Beadsley, an 11-year-old sixth grader at Wredling Middle School in St. 
Charles, was just going to run the first three miles of the marathon with 
his father, but felt so good that he just ran the rest of the 23.2 miles 
for good measure.

Many runners' children ran the final stretch down Illinois St. with them 
and countless tears were shed as racers crossed the finish line with their 
arms raised in triumph.

"We made 1,000 runners very happy today," Bixler said. "The only runner I 
saw unhappy was the one who didn't realize the race was sold out and tried 
to register just before the race. At its best, race day is filled with 
first time marathons, tears of joy, inspirational stories, personal bests 
and Boston qualifiers. We had all of those.

"It was a day to remember for our runners, and because it was our inaugural 
event, it will be a day to remember for everyone in the Fox Valley 
community who helped make it happen."

                                ###

 

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